[Footnote 22: Kayserling, Die juedischen Frauen,
Leipsic, 1879, pp. 306-313; Rubinow, op. cit., p.
581. The Russian Jewess has already produced
several writers above the average (Einhorn, Mosessohn,
Ben Yehudah, Sarah and Eva Schapira) in Hebrew, has
given Russian literature at least one novelist of
note (Rachel Khin), has furnished leaders in the movement
for the emancipation of women (Maria Saker), and especially
for the liberation of Russia (Finger, Helfman, Levinsohn,
Novinsky, Rabinovich). According to Mr. Rabinow,
the Russo-Jewish “women and girls use every
available means” to obtain an education, and
at least fifty per cent of them possess a knowledge
of Russian in addition to their vernacular Yiddish.]